• t_berium@lemmy.world
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    1 day ago

    This is just another feature of tribal thinking. For various reasons, people are no longer able to differentiate, so that at almost all levels it is now all about “us” versus “them”. And how did that come about? Those who have power and money make the rules and distract us from the real causes of people’s problems by dividing us. And most people seem to swallow this unreservedly. If you don’t believe me, just read the comments here in this thread alone.

  • shirro@aussie.zone
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    3 days ago

    It’s just an extension of extremist Christian white nationalism/neonazi shit. They realized terminally online young men were very vulnerable to this sort of grooming way back before gamergate even. It was definately weaponized in the US against Clinton and Harris. It’s 90% political in origin.

    It is arguably true that many young men are shat on by the world we have created for them compared with the past. Stupid fucking gig economy, home ownership, cost of living, transition from manufacturing to service economy. But the people enslaving their brains are the same people with a foot on their necks keeping them down economically and socially. Pull back the curtains and its a handful of mega rich cunts protecting their fortunes by raising a compliant army of cucks to distort the democratic process.

    Young men need to open their eyes and tell the sketchy old pedo dudes trying to manipulate them to fuckoff, NYPA!

    • eureka@aussie.zone
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      1 day ago

      You’re on the ball. In Australia, a member of the current biggest neo-Nazi group (Stuart von Moger IIRC) tried to join NDIS and got investogated when they asked to be assigned to disaffected young men. This is an established strategy across the Western world and one certainly at play here.

  • No1@aussie.zone
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    3 days ago

    Do parents have any role in raising their children anymore? I never see it mentioned…

    • Taleya@aussie.zone
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      2 days ago

      You can argue that, but historically, how many men have been raised by strong women and still turned out to be misogynistic fucks?

      The societal influences and behavioural trends will always outweigh the home environment

    • curiousaur@reddthat.com
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      2 days ago

      Once the kid is like 10, the outside world has like 90% of the influence on them. If anything the teachers are at fault. Cell phones should not be allowed in schools, and harassment of any kind should be immediately punished.

    • vividspecter@aussie.zone
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      2 days ago

      Personal responsibilty approaches to behaviour change have never worked and never will work. You might as well be shouting into the void for all the good it will do. You need to address these sorts of issues at the societal level.

    • mranachi@aussie.zone
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      2 days ago

      I’m not sure if it was what you are going for, but one explanation is that the ever accessible dopamine hijacking bullshit spreading machine of social media is diluting the fuck out of parents influence.

      Couple this with a new requirement of dual incomes to subsist.

      So yes parents do have a role, and they are being squeezed out of it like a zit. The outcomes suck for everyone. I don’t know why it’s not mentioned, likely because it’s hard to ignore the egregious impacts of unfettered capitalism if you start asking these questions.

  • SaneMartigan@aussie.zone
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    3 days ago

    The Manosphere is a problem all over the world. Turning men against women is another distraction from the class war. We all need to be turning against billionaires, but it’s hard to convince young people/men of that.

  • randomaside@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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    3 days ago

    I think about this often. Follow me here because this may seem convoluted but I don’t have a better way of explaining it out loud. These are just my two cents.

    There is a very consistent “power fantasy” that is delivered to men from early childhood. There is a core logical fallacy to all these power fantasies tied directly to their gender which is essentially a birthright to power.

    The harsh reality is that there are no gender based birthrights to power IRL.

    Instead of truly observing power dynamics, they create a coagulated malformed response which is to construct the thing they were promised (power by birthright). “Manosphere” content provides a framework of loop holes and logical fallacies to get them closer to the right to obtain power simply via subscription. The subscription process is mostly performative often via mimicry aligned role models. This aligns extremely well with fascist agendas and is easily exploited.

    I’ve seen this manifest in weird arguments like “Women only have rights because Men give it to them” as if it’s some sort of kindness or a handicap in a sport to award others with basic rights.

    Its all very gross

  • DavidDoesLemmy@aussie.zone
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    3 days ago

    I’m not doing more because I’m not in schools and I don’t interact with kids. This is a problem I have very little influence on.

  • Sheppa@aussie.zone
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    3 days ago

    Aren’t most teachers women? Why aren’t women doing anything to address this, something is clearly failing in their classrooms.

    • blind3rdeye@aussie.zone
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      3 days ago

      In primary school most teachers are women, but in high school - which is what we’re talking about, it’s pretty balanced.

      More to the point though, something is failing in classrooms. That’s what the article is about, hence the title “misogyny is thriving in our schools”. Obviously it is not being caused by the teachers. The teachers do not want this to happen. It makes for a horrible work environment - especially for the female teachers. Programs and strategies are being implemented to try to address the problem, but the root of the problem is not from the school itself.

      I hope that answers your genuine good-faith questions on the topic.

        • blarghly@lemmy.world
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          1 day ago

          Teachers are limited in what they can do. They aren’t magic - they can’t just snap their fingers and create different beliefs and good behavior. They can’t spend their whole workday trying to un-brainwash a single student. And even if they did, they can’t follow that student home to continue this work. With limited options to actually change a student’s point of view, they are left with options to simply curb the behavior so they can get on with teaching.

          However, these options are also limited. They can enact small punishments in the classroom like taking away certain privileges. Or they can send the student to the administration for some kind of punishment like detention. These punishments typically don’t result in significant behavior change. Schools have the option of expelling students, but this is heavily frowned upon by higher-ups, as it puts more strain on overtaxed “second chance” schools, and often brings the ire of parents.

          So the teacher ends up stuck with a misbehaving student without the time or resources to effectively change their mind or their behavior. Blaming individual teachers is… dumb. It’s really dumb. Teachers are there to teach, and to handle minor disciplinary issues. They need more resources to handle bigger issues like this.

        • blind3rdeye@aussie.zone
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          2 days ago

          Well, ‘majority’ just means more than 50% - so your claim is true. But that doesn’t mean what I said is “wrong”. The site you linked to says 61%. (Which I still think is relatively balanced compared to many fields of work.) And obviously that proportion will not be uniform in every school.

          Why are you trying to push responsibility of the problem to women anyway? That’s pretty weird. I’m surprising you’re still pushing on this even now. It’s as if you actually feel strongly that women teachers in particular are the only people who can address this issue. I don’t know why you’d take that view.

            • blind3rdeye@aussie.zone
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              1 day ago

              You have said in multiple posts that “women” should be doing more to address the issue of misogyny.

              What are you saying now? That you don’t think teachers aren’t doing their jobs? Holy smokes man. It’s not what you were saying before, but it is similarly hateful.

    • Ilandar@lemmy.today
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      3 days ago

      Err, these boys aren’t being taught Misogyny 101 in the classroom…the female teachers are often the victims here. Asking them to solve this problem is delusional.

    • WhatAmLemmy@lemmy.world
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      3 days ago

      Why do you blame teachers, apparently because they’re women, and not their parents?

      This is the result of giving “conservative” misogynists a platform instead of a black eye.

      • FiveMacs@lemmy.ca
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        3 days ago

        you’re weird…

        You ask a question, then instantly answer it

        You then resort to physical violence.

        good show…

        • WhatAmLemmy@lemmy.world
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          1 day ago

          Lol. I’m guessing you’re one of the cucks who think we should solve fascism and narcissism in the marketplace of ideas. Give me a break, loser.

    • The Cuuuuube@beehaw.org
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      3 days ago

      i don’t know how things are in Australia, but i do know how misogyny is so common in American schools. you can’t think of it as being individual failures on behalf of the teachers. you have to think of this as entire system of patriarchy that selects for individuals who are less likely to resist it.

      firstly are the weed out systems:

      1. a school teacher needs 4-6 years worth of higher education to be eligible to teach meaning a school teacher is more likely to come from a wealthier, more conservative background
      2. a school teacher is paid poverty wages, making them more reliant on spousal support, creating a soft reinforcement of traditional gender roles
      3. teachers are hired by administrators who are usually men, men who can have unaudited privilege in the system of patriarchy, creating bias in what they consider “professional” for a teacher towards someone who will fit into this overall system

      then there’s the reinforcement systems

      1. you are genuinely correct that most teachers are more progressive when it comes to social issues, but they are also making poverty wages meaning they’re more reliant on the job. they’re more desperate and therefore less likely to upset the apple cart
      2. teachers are not the only people who interact with kids. administrators are usually who operate the punishment system in a school. this punishment system creates an interplay between the nurturing mother stock character and the disciplinary father stock character. the disciplinary father stock character in his role will often hand children mysogynistic views very directly.
      • Ilandar@lemmy.today
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        3 days ago

        a school teacher needs 4-6 years worth of higher education to be eligible to teach meaning a school teacher is more likely to come from a wealthier, more conservative background

        Most Australian university students have their study 100% funded upfront by the Australian government and only pay it back over time if they earn above a minimum threshold, so the connection between socioeconomic background and university education isn’t as strong as in the US (though it definitely still exists).

      • Zagorath@aussie.zone
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        3 days ago

        a school teacher is more likely to come from a wealthier, more conservative background

        I couldn’t find stats for Australia, but in America teachers are statistically more likely to be Democrats than Republicans, so I don’t think this is supported.

        It is also worth noting that, though I couldn’t find anything on Australian educators’ political leanings, teachers are one of the most highly unionised workforces in the country, and our centrist party (the one the media and many in the general public would call “centre-left”, like your Democrats) has explicit ties to the union movement.

        a school teacher is paid poverty wages

        In Australia they’re paid quite well. It doesn’t scale as highly for the average teacher as it does in many other highly educated jobs, but the base salary is pretty good. There’s the important caveat that teachers are largely expected to spend their own money on classroom supplies, though.

        teachers are hired by administrators who are usually men, men who can have unaudited privilege

        Teachers in Australia are hired by the department based largely on very impersonal factors like qualifications. There’s not a huge amount of room, at the level of classroom teachers, for that kind of bias to have as much of an effect. What more personal decisionmaking does happen is done largely by principals, who are former teachers themselves. Because hiring is done at the department level, principles can get involved in decisions like who gets a job at which school, but the fact that they have a job at all is much more impersonal. The promotion and hiring of principles and other non-classroom positions may be a different question.

        That said, I’m not disagreeing with your main point. It is a systemic failure. At a scale far larger than merely within schools.

        • The Cuuuuube@beehaw.org
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          2 days ago

          to discuss how these things happen in other parts of the world with similar roots of anglocentric patriarchy. i’m not trying to drive the conversation, just provide “here’s what happens in another part of the world, maybe it will help analyze your systems”